Cash Flow Projection and a Successful Exit

A small business owner named Simon understands how the cash flow of the business drives his current income, and as well how it would eventually impact the valuation and sale price. However, Simon lacked awareness of elements of potential exit routes that demand cash flow.

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Year-End Action: Sole Owners Should Review Business Continuity Instructions

The end of each year is an ideal time for a sole business owner to review and update their Business Continuity Instructions. An owner’s death or permanent incapacity often leads to the failure of a business, resulting in very difficult consequences for the family, employees, and customers. Written and distributed Business Continuity Instructions will provide those left behind with essential short-term and long-term instructions regarding the continuance of the business.

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An Overlooked Risk in Management Buy-Outs

An often adopted exit strategy for a founder of a small business is to sell to a group of employees who have expressed a desire to be the future owners. Factors to be considered in assessing the viability of this strategy for the selling owner(s) include their personal financial goals, risk tolerance regarding payment of sale proceeds, and the buyers' capabilities to be successful business owners. Another risk factor most often neglected is whether the employees, who may be working well together, will succeed as business partners.

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Understanding the Taxation of Key Person Insurance

Key person insurance plays a vital role in protecting businesses from the financial impact of losing key individuals within the organization. It provides a safety net by compensating the company for the loss incurred due to the death or disability of a key employee. While key person insurance is a valuable risk management tool, business owners must understand the taxation aspects associated with these policies.

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Exposing Reality and Execution in Planning Your Exit

A business book that I read the book when it was first published, and find helpful to revisit regularly, is Execution: The Discipline of Getting Things Done by Larry Bossidy and Ram Charan. The authors’ definition of “execution” is particularly insightful and helpful when considering how an owner should build a business that is transferable, and in planning their eventual exit from the business

“Fundamentally, execution is the discipline of systematically exposing reality and acting on it.”

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Salary (Wage) Continuation or Deferred Compensation?

Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation (NQDC) often plays a role when structuring either a sale to insiders or a transfer of the business to children in the business. It is a type of retirement plan that allows highly compensated employees (in this case the exiting owner) to realize tax advantages by deferring a percentage of their compensation (and current income taxes) beyond what is permitted by the IRS in a qualified retirement plan (i.e., 401K). In essence, it is paying out INCOME EARNED at some point in the future, with a primary goal of minimizing income taxes.

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Cash Flow Projection and a Successful Exit

A small business owner named Simon understands how the cash flow of the business drives his current income, and as well how it would eventually impact the valuation and sale price. However, Simon lacked awareness of elements of potential exit routes that demand cash flow.

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Will Your Buy-Sell Agreement Solve Problems or Cause Problems?

The most important business planning document that multiple owners of a business can have is a buy-sell agreement.  A buy-sell agreement provides direction to owners and other stakeholders when certain events trigger the transition of an ownership interest in a business. 

These agreements can be very effective in minimizing uncertainty and indecision during challenging and emotional times.  However, it’s not enough to simply have a buy-sell agreement, it needs to be written skillfully to accomplish the desires and goals of the owner(s).

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Keep The End In Mind

Often business owners are exhorted to build their business with "the end", or their eventual exit in mind.  This can be a good idea in that it lends toward building your business to have "transferable value", or value that someone else will want to buy and own when you're ready to leave.  Value apart from you the owner.

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Living Trusts and Avoiding Probate in Estate Transfer of Your Business

Probate is the legal process through which property is transferred after a property owner’s death. Generally, the probate process requires the gathering of all assets, paying off debts, and distributing the remaining assets in accordance with the deceased person’s estate plan and the law. The probate process is facilitated by a court-approved, or appointed, a person known as the administrator, executor, or personal representative of the estate.

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Assigning Value to Key Employees

Key employees are “key” because they have a significant impact on the current and long-term success of the business. Hence, the business owner(s) will want to be intentional and strategic in aligning compensation and incentive plans for those key employees with the owner’s goals for business growth and exit. Owners should also protect against the potential loss of these valued employees due to death or disability, as their loss can be quite damaging and even destructive to business value and future growth. Following are suggested steps to take in assigning value to your key employees.

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Internal Sale with Modified Buy-Out

This internal sale method works best for most owners who have the following goals:

  • Transfer their business to key employees

  • Motivate and retain key employees

  • Receive full value for their business

Let’s look at a short case study regarding the concept of Modified Buyouts.

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Some Thoughts About Family Business Transfers

You might think that transferring your business to a child or family member would be the easiest exit route to facilitate. Whereas statistics reveal that only one-third of all family businesses pass successfully to the next generation, and only 10% to the third generation.

Owners considering a transfer to children often run into these obstacles, among others…

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Sole Ownership and Planning for The Unexpected

A sole owner of a business who has a spouse and/or family has not a few key planning issues that need to be addressed before it’s too late.  “Too late” being the unexpected events of death or permanent incapacity or disability.  To illustrate, let’s use the following story that is based on real life events…

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Aligning Employee Incentive Plans with Owner Goals

Sarah wanted to exit in 5 years and had learned through planning and analysis led by her exit planner what “her number” was, as well as an objective estimate of the value for her business. She was pleasantly surprised to find that the financial gap for making her post-business dreams happen is not insurmountable. At the same time, she is aware that growing the value of the business (Sarah’s largest asset) will be necessary to close the existing gap.

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An Often Neglected Means Of Protecting Business Value

One of the compelling and common characteristics of successful owners is their optimism.  Their “glass is always half full” attitude results in the risk-taking, perseverance, and innovation it takes to build and grow a successful business.  And, like it is with any personal strength, this strength of optimism can quickly become a weakness when there is a need to plan for the gloomy business contingencies of death and disability.  What happens to the business due to either of these less than optimistic events is probably the last thing an owner wants to think about.

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Exit Planning and your heart’s desires

As a business owner you pour your heart into your work and it has become part of you. But at times, the business you have carefully nurtured for years can become a burden - there's a part of you that yearns to do something else - travel, spend more time with family, enjoy more leisure, or even start another new business. You are confused. 

So when it comes to considering the future of your business, where is your heart?

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